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🇸🇩🇪🇹 Breaking Points discusses the ongoing humanitarian crisis and civil and proxy war in Sudan, highlighting the discovery of mass graves in Khartoum and the widespread brutality and starvation civilians face. The hosts also note the Sudanese military’s success in breaking a long-standing siege in Dilling in central Sudan....

30,092 просмотров • 5 месяцев назад •via X (Twitter)

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🇦🇪🇸🇩 At the NYT DealBook Summit, former USAID head Samantha Power blamed waning student activism for the lack of pressure over the conflict in Sudan, suggesting young people today are preoccupied with things like personal insecurity, “whether they’ll have jobs,” and “affordability,” rather than mass atrocities. The remark was striking given the scale of student mobilization over the U.S.-Israeli genocide in Gaza during the Biden administration, when Power was overseeing humanitarian assistance during Israel’s illegal siege on two million Palestinians in Gaza. Power also sharply criticized the lack of accountability for the UAE despite extensive evidence linking Emirati backing to RSF atrocities in Sudan, including “mass rape” and ethnic cleansing. She called it “incoherent” for Washington, including the Biden administration, to pursue major strategic and AI partnerships with the UAE while it continues the slaughter in Sudan. She highlighted that the U.S. is failing to use available leverage, pointing to “elite and sports diplomacy” as pressure points that remain unused. She cited the NBA in particular, as the league has deep and expanding ties to the UAE. Emirates Airline is the NBA’s global airline partner and the title sponsor of the league’s in-season tournament, now branded the “Emirates NBA Cup,” with Emirates logos appearing on referee jerseys and across league marketing. The NBA has also hosted preseason games in Abu Dhabi for several consecutive years, part of a broader expansion strategy that includes partnerships with UAE-linked entities and teams like the New York Knicks. Human rights groups, including Human Rights Watch, have warned these deals risk enabling “sportswashing,” allowing the UAE to polish its global image despite its key role in atrocities in Sudan. Sen. Chris Coons echoed the urgency, describing Sudan as a regional proxy war fueled by external powers, including the UAE and others, backing rival armed actors. He said the war will not end without “active U.S. engagement” to pressure those regional sponsors, and added that it was a “big mistake” to sign major business deals with UAE without conditioning them on ending support for the RSF. He also cautioned that U.S. cuts to humanitarian aid triggered a wider pullback by allies, leaving Sudan dangerously under-resourced amid the world’s worst humanitarian crisis.

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88,116 просмотров • 7 месяцев назад

Ethiopia Could Become the Epicenter of a Larger Conflict While Ethiopia attempts to remain uninvolved in the Sudanese conflict, it has been arming itself and repeatedly asserting that access to the sea is an existential issue for the country. Ethiopian officials have stated that "3 million Eritreans cannot decide the fate of nearly 200 million Ethiopians." In recent months, tensions in the region have risen sharply, with separatist threats emerging inside Ethiopia and Eritrea providing direct support to the Sudanese government in its civil war. The reality is that Ethiopia has been significantly strengthening its air force. It currently operates many less capable aircrafts, but also 20 Su-27s and few Su-30s, and in the last month it has reportedly ordered 6 Su-35s. Eritrea today lacks the capacity to face a unified Ethiopia with a strong air force. However, Egypt has entered the equation by conducting military exercises and deepening cooperation with Eritrea and Somalia, two countries that are openly hostile to Ethiopia. Even with Egyptian support - without direct involvement- these two countries can’t beat an unified Ethiopia. But under this hot temperature, If Ethiopia were to launch an offensive against Eritrea, this might encourage already restive and armed regions within Ethiopia to seek independence, potentially repeating the Sudanese civil war into a broader catastrophe across the Horn of Africa.

Patricia Marins

60,112 просмотров • 6 месяцев назад